Does Aid translate into Bilateral Trade? Findings for Recipient Countries

2011 | conference paper

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Does Aid translate into Bilateral Trade? Findings for Recipient Countries​
Martínez-Zarzoso, I. ; Nowak-Lehmann, F. D. ; Herzer, D.; Cardozo, A.   & Klasen, S. ​ (2011)
​Proceedings of the German Development Economics Conference. ​German Development Economics Conference​, Berlin.

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Martínez-Zarzoso, Inmaculada ; Nowak-Lehmann, Felicitas D. ; Herzer, Dierk; Cardozo, Adriana ; Klasen, Stephan 
Abstract
This paper uses the gravity model of trade to investigate the link between foreign aid and exports in recipient countries. Most of the theoretical work emphasizes the negative impact of aid on recipient countries' exports primarily due to exchange rate appreciation, disregarding possible positive effects of aid in overcoming supply bottlenecks and promoting bilateral trade relations. Our empirical findings -all based on endogeneity-proof techniques (such as Dynamic OLS or more refined techniques) - depend very strongly on whether bilateral trade relations and autocorrelation of the disturbances are controlled for. When not controlling for these phenomena, the impact of aid is quite substantial (especially in Asia, Latin America & Caribbean) but when sound estimation techniques are applied the net impact of aid on recipient countries' exports becomes insignificant in the full 130-country sample and the subsamples: Sub-Saharan Africa & MENA, Asia and Latin America & the Caribbean. However, this rather disappointing finding is in line with the small macroeconomic impact of aid found in earlier studies.
Issue Date
2011
Conference
German Development Economics Conference
Conference Place
Berlin
Event start
2011
Event end
2011
Language
English

Reference

Citations